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Virtual English-language sessions for Montreal and Quebec

Gut-Directed Hypnotherapy for Montreal IBS Patients

I run gut-directed hypnotherapy on the Manchester Protocol framework, virtually in English to the Greater Montreal Area, Laval, Longueuil, the West Island, and the rest of Quebec. Same protocol I'd use in person in Calgary, just no commute.

Danny M., RCHARCH-registeredUpdated April 2026

English-language delivery only. Hypnotherapy is complementary care, not a substitute for medical diagnosis or treatment. Hypnotherapy isn't a regulated health profession in Quebec, and is distinct from psychotherapy as regulated by the Ordre des psychologues du Québec (OPQ). Consult your physician for medical concerns. Best suited for adults with a diagnosed gut condition or one being actively worked up by your physician.

Honest framing first. I'm anglophone and Calgary-based, sessions are virtual, and I work in English only. For French-speaking patients, a francophone clinical hypnotherapist will serve you better. Bilingual Quebec patients who are comfortable in English get the same Manchester Protocol work as any of my Calgary in-person clients, minus the commute.

Gut-directed hypnotherapy for Montreal IBS patients (English-language)

If you're searching for gut-directed hypnotherapy in Montreal, it's usually because something about your gut isn't working the way it should, the standard interventions haven't resolved it, and you've read enough about the brain-gut axis to want a real clinical conversation rather than another dietary tweak. This page is my honest version of what that conversation looks like and what I actually offer English-speaking Quebec patients.

I serve the Greater Montreal Area and the rest of Quebec virtually, in English. Same Manchester Protocol framework. Same person (me) on every session. Same one-on-one structure I use with my in-person Calgary clients. The relevant differences for a Montreal reader are geography and language. I work from Calgary, we connect over secure video, and I build my schedule around Eastern Time evening slots so a working professional in downtown Montreal, the Plateau, NDG, Westmount, the West Island, Laval, Longueuil, the South Shore, or further afield in Quebec can fit a 60-minute session into a normal weeknight. I work in English only.

I'm Danny M., RCH, a Registered Clinical Hypnotherapist with the Association of Registered Clinical Hypnotherapists (ARCH). My practice is specifically focused on gut-directed hypnotherapy. I'm not a generalist hypnotherapist who added gut work as a side line. The conditions I work with are IBS in all subtypes (IBS-D, IBS-C, IBS-M, IBS-U), small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) when there's a clear gut-brain overlay, functional dyspepsia, post-infectious IBS, and IBS with anxiety overlap. My fee is $220 CAD per session, the standard initial commitment is three sessions ($660 CAD total), and continuation beyond the initial three is optional and per-session.

A note on language before we go further. Gut-directed hypnotherapy is precise language work. The visceral suggestion sets I use, the gut-brain imagery, and the inter-session debriefs all rely on you and me sharing a strong common language. For francophone Montreal patients whose first language is French, the better fit is a francophone clinical hypnotherapist; the Manchester Protocol exists in francophone clinical practice and your search is best directed there. Bilingual Quebec patients who are genuinely comfortable doing focused clinical work in English fit my practice on the same terms as any other Canadian client.

Why this matters in Montreal specifically

Based on the Verified Hypnotherapists directory (verified-hypnotherapists.com), there are 25 verified hypnotherapists practicing in Montreal. Average rating 5.0 across the directory. Of those 25, essentially none specifically list gut-directed or IBS-focused work as their specialty.

That's the gap I fill virtually from Calgary, in English. Montreal has plenty of strong hypnotherapists for stress, sleep, smoking cessation, and weight. Practitioners who specifically run the Manchester Protocol for IBS in English? Hardly any. I'm one, remotely.

If you want to dig into the mechanism in more detail before reading further, the what gut-directed hypnotherapy actually is page covers the protocol structure and the gut-brain axis in clinical depth. For the condition-first framing of the same work, see the hypnotherapy for IBS overview.

Quebec service area map: Greater Montreal Area and outlying communities served virtually in English from the Calgary practiceQuebec virtual service area (English-language)Same protocol delivered to every Quebec community. Geography is irrelevant; language match matters.St. Lawrence RiverGatineauVirtual ENWest IslandVirtual ENLavalVirtual ENLongueuilVirtual ENQuebec CityVirtual ENMontrealDowntown, Plateau, NDG, Westmount, Mile EndPrimary catchment (English-speaking)South ShoreVirtual ENNorth ShoreVirtual ENSherbrookeVirtual ENTrois-RivièresVirtual ENSaguenayVirtual EN
Montreal and Quebec: same person (me), same protocol, virtual delivery in English to every community in the catchment.

What makes Montreal IBS care challenging

Here's what I see most often with my Montreal clients. IBS care in Quebec is shaped by a specific structural problem. The medical pathways exist, the major teaching hospitals exist (the McGill University Health Centre and the Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal among them), the diagnostic tools exist. The bottleneck is access. A non-urgent gastroenterology referral in the Montreal catchment typically lands you in a six to fifteen month queue depending on the referring family doctor, the specific GI service, the urgency triage, and whether you're enrolled in a Groupe de médecine de famille. For someone whose IBS is steady but miserable, the queue becomes most of the experience.

Once you reach a gastroenterologist at MUHC, CHUM, or one of the regional services, the workup is genuinely useful. Bloodwork, stool studies, possibly a colonoscopy or endoscopy, the appropriate exclusion of inflammatory bowel disease, coeliac disease, and structural causes. What gastroenterology doesn't typically do, in the Quebec pathway, is provide a brain-gut behavioural treatment in-house. Once the IBS diagnosis is made, the standard handoff I hear from my clients is a fibre recommendation, possibly a low-FODMAP referral if a hospital-affiliated dietitian is available, occasionally an antispasmodic or a low-dose neuromodulator, and a follow-up in three to six months. That's not negligence on anyone's part; it's just what the system is staffed to deliver.

The English-speaking access layer adds a second constraint. McGill-affiliated services and the MUHC operate substantially in English; outside that network, primary-care and dietitian access in English varies by neighbourhood and by practice. For an anglophone patient in Laval, on the South Shore, or further from the McGill catchment, the practical options for English-language brain-gut behavioural care narrow further. The gap I'm sitting inside is therefore a doubled gap: the brain-gut intervention layer is thin everywhere in Quebec, and the English-language version of it is thinner still.

The gap is the brain-gut intervention layer. The major gastroenterology guidelines (NICE in the UK, the American Gastroenterological Association, and the American College of Gastroenterology) all explicitly recommend gut-directed hypnotherapy and cognitive behavioural therapy for IBS as evidence-based options, especially for refractory IBS where first-line interventions haven't delivered adequate relief. What the guidelines recommend and what's actually available locally, in English, in Quebec, are different things. A search for "gut-directed hypnotherapy Montreal" surfaces very few practices that actually run the protocol; most local hypnotherapy is generalist practice with a gut-adjacent marketing line.

That mismatch is what most of my Montreal clients describe when they show up to the fit call. The diagnosis exists. The medical workup is done. The low-FODMAP attempt has been made and either helped partially or proved unsustainable long-term. The next step the gastroenterologist mentioned in passing was "something brain-gut, maybe hypnotherapy or CBT" but the referral pathway for that recommendation was unclear, and they ended up Googling. That Google search is usually how my English-speaking Quebec clients find this page.

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Quebec patient pathway tip
If you haven't yet seen a gastroenterologist and you have any red-flag features (unintentional weight loss, blood in stool, nocturnal symptoms, family history of colorectal cancer, onset after age 50), get the referral going first regardless of the wait. What I do is appropriate for diagnosed disorders of gut-brain interaction. It isn't a substitute for diagnostic workup. The two run in sequence, not as alternatives, and your physician should know what behavioural work you're doing alongside the medical pathway.
Quebec IBS patient pathway: from family doctor to gastroenterology wait to self-management gap, with where gut-directed hypnotherapy fitsTypical Quebec IBS care pathwaySTEP 1Family doctorInitial workup,GI referral letterSTEP 2GI specialist wait6 to 15 monthsnon-urgent referralSTEP 3MUHC, CHUM workupDiagnosis, diet,possible neuromod.STEP 4: THE GAPSelf-managementBrain-gut interventionrecommended, not deliveredGut-directed hypnotherapy fits hereCloses the brain-gut intervention gap; works alongside GI careRecommended in NICE, AGA, and ACG guidelines for IBS
GDH closes the brain-gut intervention gap that the standard Quebec pathway leaves open after GI workup.

The role I play in this picture is specific. I don't replace the gastroenterologist. I don't replace medication where medication is indicated. I don't replace dietary work where dietary work is helping. What I do is close the brain-gut intervention layer the standard pathway leaves open. The Montreal clients who get the most out of this work are usually the ones who've already done the medical workup, tried the diet, and still have an IBS profile dominated by visceral hypersensitivity, anticipatory anxiety, or a stress-driven flare pattern.


What gut-directed hypnotherapy actually is

Gut-directed hypnotherapy (GDH) is a clinical protocol designed specifically for IBS and disorders of gut-brain interaction. It isn't generalist hypnotherapy applied to gut symptoms, and it definitely isn't "thinking yourself better." The way I think about it: the protocol targets two well-characterised mechanisms in the IBS literature. Visceral hypersensitivity (the way your brain interprets normal gut signals as painful or threatening). And brain-gut dysregulation (the disrupted feedback loop along the vagus nerve between the central and enteric nervous systems).

Each session I run is built around three elements. I open with a focused conversation about what's changed in your symptom pattern since the previous session, then guide you into a focused-attention state through a structured induction. In that state, I deliver specific gut-directed suggestions and visceral imagery: warm, comfortable, smoothly-flowing transit; a calmed sensation in specific abdominal regions; a downward-regulated stress-response signal along the gut-brain axis. We close with reorientation and a brief discussion of between-session home practice.

The framework I use is the Manchester Protocol, developed at the University Hospital of South Manchester under gastroenterologist Peter Whorwell starting with the 1984 Lancet randomised controlled trial of hypnotherapy for refractory IBS. The original protocol ran 7 to 12 weekly sessions. Modern clinic-derived adaptations vary the session count while preserving the structural arc (gut-brain education and induction, deepening and visceral suggestion, consolidation and integration). I run a 3-session commitment with optional continuation. Short enough to give us a clean checkpoint, without locking a non-responder into an extended programme.

What makes GDH a distinct intervention rather than "hypnosis applied to the gut" is the combination of all three features: the gut-brain axis as the explicit clinical target, the focused-attention state as the delivery mechanism, and the Manchester-derived session arc as the structural skeleton. Remove any one and you've got something else. A meditation app on digestion has none of the induction or session structure. A generalist hypnotherapy session on stress has the state but not the gut-brain target or the protocol arc. Both can feel pleasant. Neither is GDH.

It's also distinct from psychotherapy as Quebec regulates that practice. The Ordre des psychologues du Québec reserves the title psychotherapist and the act of psychotherapy under provincial law. What I do as an RCH is a focused, condition-specific intervention for disorders of gut-brain interaction. It isn't a broad psychotherapy practice, and I don't represent it as psychotherapy. The two categories serve different needs and different patient profiles.

For a deeper treatment of the protocol, the gut-brain axis, and the clinical rationale, see what gut-directed hypnotherapy is in detail.


The evidence

Gut-directed hypnotherapy has one of the stronger evidence bases of any non-pharmacological intervention for IBS. That's an unusual sentence to write about a therapy still positioned in the public mind as alternative or fringe. But the literature is substantial, the major guideline endorsements are explicit, and the research arc goes back four decades.

Key Stat
76%

Response rate on the Manchester Protocol in the largest single-clinic audit of gut-directed hypnotherapy. 1,000 consecutive refractory IBS patients; response defined as a clinically meaningful improvement on validated symptom scoring. This is the published research benchmark for the protocol, not a Montreal-practice outcome rate.

Source: Miller 2015 (PMID 25736234)

Miller 2015 (PMID 25736234) is the headline number you'll see cited in guideline documents. It's a real-world clinic audit rather than a randomised trial, which is the appropriate framing: it reports what happened when 1,000 refractory IBS patients ran through the full Manchester Protocol at the Manchester clinic, with response measured on validated symptom scoring. Three-quarters responded. These patients had failed prior medical management before they were referred, so this isn't a cherry-picked sample of easy cases.

Peters 2016 (PMID 27397586) ran gut-directed hypnotherapy head-to-head against a low-FODMAP diet, the other major evidence-based IBS intervention, in a properly randomised design. Both arms produced clinically meaningful improvement; there was no statistically significant difference between them on symptom outcomes at 6-month follow-up. The way I read this trial: it's not "GDH beats diet" or vice versa. It's that both are legitimate evidence-based options, with different cost, ongoing-effort, and quality-of-life trade-offs. GDH wins on the long-term ease side because it doesn't require permanent dietary restriction; FODMAP wins on rapid initial response in some subtypes. For a fuller side-by-side, see the hypnotherapy for IBS overview.

Key Stat
76% vs 65%

Long-term durability of response in IBS patients five-plus years after gut-directed hypnotherapy, compared with medical management alone. Most IBS interventions including diet regress at 12 to 24 months. This is one of the strongest pieces of evidence that the GDH effect persists.

Source: Hasan 2019 (PMID 30702396)

Hasan 2019 (PMID 30702396) is the durability case for GDH. At five-plus years post-treatment, 76% of GDH patients maintained their initial improvement; the medical management comparison group maintained improvement at 65%. The substantive point isn't the head-to-head margin; it's that GDH effects don't seem to dissipate the way most IBS interventions do over a 12 to 24 month window. That's the basis for me thinking about a short commitment as a real investment rather than a recurring treatment cost.

Everitt 2019 (PMID 30765267) is the parallel piece of evidence for cognitive behavioural therapy for IBS, the other brain-gut behavioural option. CBT for IBS delivered by trained therapists produced clinically significant improvement in 71% of patients in a large UK randomised trial. Both CBT-for-IBS and GDH are now in NICE and BSG guidelines as evidence-based brain-gut therapies. I want to be clear: the point isn't that GDH is better than CBT. The trial designs differ, the mechanisms differ, and patient fit varies. The point is that there are two evidence-based brain-gut behavioural options for IBS, and gut-directed hypnotherapy is one of them. I see plenty of Quebec clients who've already done a full course of CBT for IBS without lasting gut-symptom change, and the mechanism difference makes that pattern unsurprising rather than a criticism of CBT.

Evidence-base timeline: Whorwell 1984, Miller 2015, Peters 2016, Hasan 201940-year evidence arc behind the Manchester Protocol1Whorwell 1984First RCTOrigin trial19842Miller 2015n = 1,000 audit76% response20153Peters 2016RCT vs low-FODMAPEquivalent20164Hasan 20195+ year durability76% maintained2019NICE, American Gastroenterological Association, American College of Gastroenterology recommend GDH for IBSResearch citations, not Montreal-practice outcome rates
The four pillars of the GDH evidence base: origin trial, large clinical audit, head-to-head RCT, long-term durability.

The guideline picture is the cleanest summary I can offer. The UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) in its 2022 IBS guideline, and the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) in its 2021 IBS guideline all explicitly recommend gut-directed hypnotherapy as an evidence-based option for IBS, particularly refractory IBS where first-line interventions haven't delivered adequate relief. This isn't fringe positioning; it's the mainstream gastroenterology guideline read on the evidence.

Want to know if gut-directed hypnotherapy fits your Montreal IBS picture?

The fit-consultation call is the honest way to find out before any commitment. English-only delivery; no pressure to book.

Apply for a consult

How virtual sessions work for Quebec patients

I run sessions over a secure video link, in English. Montreal, Laval, Longueuil, the West Island, the South Shore, the North Shore, Gatineau, Quebec City, Sherbrooke, Trois-Rivières, Saguenay, anywhere in the province: the connection is identical. You join from your home or home office at your scheduled time, I join from Calgary, and the session runs the same way an in-person session would.

What you need on your end is straightforward. A laptop, desktop, or tablet with a working camera. Headphones; this matters more than people expect, because the visceral suggestion work depends on clean audio without ambient room sound. A quiet room where you won't be interrupted for 60 minutes. A stable internet connection. That's the entire technical setup. No special software to install beyond the video platform link. Nothing stored on your end.

I build my schedule around the Quebec workday. Montreal is two hours ahead of Calgary, so I deliberately hold Quebec-friendly evening slots that map to my afternoon hours in Mountain Time. A typical Quebec-friendly slot is 6:00 to 7:00 PM Eastern, which is 4:00 to 5:00 PM Mountain for me. Earlier Eastern Time slots and some daytime Eastern Time slots are also workable. After-work weekday is the most-used booking pattern; weekend slots are limited.

The clinical content doesn't change because the session is virtual. I deliver the same Manchester-framework induction, the same gut-directed suggestion sets, the same inter-session homework structure. Hasan 2019 (PMID 30702396) is the formal evidence that telehealth-delivered GDH and in-person GDH produce comparable long-term durability profiles. In my practice, what I see is that virtual delivery removes friction for working professionals. The 30-to-90-minute round-trip commute that would be involved in any in-person Montreal specialist appointment is gone, which is part of why the 3-session commitment is realistic to actually complete.

For a deeper treatment of the virtual delivery format, see virtual hypnotherapy across Canada.

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Headphones, not laptop speakers
The single most-overlooked technical detail I see is audio. Laptop speakers introduce ambient room reflection and make the visceral suggestion language harder to settle into. Wired or Bluetooth headphones, even basic ones, give you a clearer experience. Same point for video: a laptop on a table works better than a phone propped up, because it removes one more thing for your attention to drift to. For my Montreal clients in older apartments with neighbour noise, a closed door and basic noise-isolating headphones make a real difference to how easily you settle.

Cost and the Quebec insurance picture

My pricing is straightforward. Each session is $220 CAD. The standard initial commitment is three sessions, which is $660 CAD total. Continuation beyond the initial three is per-session at the same rate. You pay at time of service. No admin fees. Same price virtual or in-person. For a fuller cost-per-response breakdown against alternatives like Nerva or a low-FODMAP dietitian programme, see the cost breakdown page.

The Quebec insurance picture deserves a clear-eyed read. RAMQ, the Quebec public health insurance plan, doesn't cover hypnotherapy. RAMQ funds physician-delivered care and a defined list of regulated health services; hypnotherapy isn't on that list. RAMQ also generally doesn't cover dietitian visits outside of hospital settings, nor psychology services, which means much of the brain-gut and behavioural side of IBS care sits outside of public coverage in Quebec regardless of the practitioner. That's a structural feature of the system, not specific to me.

Hypnotherapy generally isn't directly covered under Canadian extended health benefit plans either. Some of my clients can claim related programs (stress management, behavioural change) under a Wellness Spending Account (WSA) if their plan offers one. Coverage rules depend entirely on plan design, so I'd ask you to check with your provider before we book.

The Quebec-specific layer on top of that general picture is regulation. In Quebec, hypnotherapy isn't a regulated health profession, which means insurer paramedical lists generally don't include it as an eligible expense even when they cover other paramedical services. There's also a parallel and distinct regulated category in the province: the Ordre des psychologues du Québec (OPQ) regulates psychotherapy under provincial law, and only OPQ-permitted practitioners may use the title psychotherapist or perform the reserved act of psychotherapy. What I do as an RCH is a different category. It isn't psychotherapy, I don't represent it as psychotherapy, and I don't draw on OPQ-permitted titles. Worth knowing if your insurer or your physician asks how the work fits inside the Quebec professional landscape.

Here's the practical sequence I'd suggest for a Quebec client. First, ask your insurance provider three questions before we book: is hypnotherapy or clinical hypnosis a directly eligible expense on my plan, do I have a Wellness Spending Account and what categories does it accept, and what receipt format and provider credentials do they need to submit a claim. Second, after each session I send you a detailed receipt that lists my ARCH registration number, which is the format any WSA claim will need. Third, you submit the receipt for any reimbursement your provider may approve. For a deeper treatment of the Canadian insurance picture, see IBS hypnotherapy insurance in Canada.

Quebec insurance landscape for gut-directed hypnotherapy: provincial public, extended benefits, and Wellness Spending AccountsQuebec insurance landscape for hypnotherapyRAMQQuebec publicNoHypnotherapy isnot a coveredservice categoryExtended benefitsEmployer/privateUsually noHypnotherapy isnot a regulatedprofession in QuebecWellness Spending AccountWhere it existsMaybeCoverage dependsentirely on plandesign; ask firstSessions paid at time of service. Detailed receipt with ARCH registration number provided for any claim you submit.
Quebec insurance reality for gut-directed hypnotherapy: RAMQ no, extended benefits usually no, WSA case-by-case.

Who this fits and who it does not

Honest framing matters more on a page like this than anywhere else. What I do is one evidence-based tool. It fits a specific client profile well, fits a different profile poorly, and is inappropriate for a third category. Sorting which one you fall into is the entire point of the fit call. Below is my working version of that sorting, with the additional Quebec language note layered on.

Best fits

  • Confirmed IBS, any subtype (IBS-D, IBS-C, IBS-M, IBS-U), with diagnosis already in place from a family doctor or gastroenterologist.
  • SIBO with a clear gut-brain overlay, where medical SIBO treatment has happened or is in motion and a residual visceral hypersensitivity pattern remains.
  • Functional dyspepsia, the upper-GI sibling of IBS, where the mechanism work overlaps significantly.
  • Post-infectious IBS, particularly where symptoms began after a documented gastroenteritis episode.
  • IBS with significant anxiety overlap, where the anticipatory and stress-driven flare pattern is clearly part of the picture.
  • Quebec patients comfortable in English, whether anglophone or strongly bilingual, who can do focused clinical work in English without losing precision.

Not a fit

  • French-first patients. Visceral suggestion work depends on a strong shared first language. A francophone clinical hypnotherapist will serve you better than an English-language programme.
  • Undiagnosed gut symptoms. See your family doctor or a gastroenterologist first. GDH is not a substitute for diagnostic workup; it presupposes one.
  • Active inflammatory bowel disease flare. Crohn's and ulcerative colitis need gastroenterology-led management. GDH can have a complementary role outside of active flare, but not during one.
  • Pregnancy without OB awareness. Hypnotherapy in pregnancy is not contraindicated, but your obstetric care team should know what you are doing.
  • Severe untreated mental health condition. Active untreated PTSD, severe depression, psychosis, or any condition where stable mental-health care is the priority. GDH does not fit until that layer is being managed, and OPQ-regulated psychological care is the appropriate pathway in Quebec.
  • Looking for a guarantee or a cure-all. GDH is one evidence-based tool. The published response rates are strong but not universal. If you need certainty, this work is not it.

The fit call exists to sort exactly this. It's a 15-minute video conversation in English, no charge, no pressure to commit. The outcome is a clear yes, a clear no, or a clear "here's what I'd suggest you look at first before this work makes sense," including a redirect to a francophone practitioner if English-language delivery is the wrong fit. Most of my fit calls land in one of those buckets within the first ten minutes. The remaining time is for your questions about pricing, scheduling, logistics, and what session 1 specifically looks like.


What a 3-session commitment looks like

I structured the 3-session commitment to give you a clean checkpoint within a short window, rather than a multi-month programme you can't exit. Each session runs about 60 minutes. We usually space sessions one to two weeks apart, with between-session home practice on a personalised audio recording from session 2 onward.

3-session commitment structure: what happens in session 1, session 2, and session 3The 3-session commitment structureEach session 60 minutes, virtual, English, scheduled 1 to 2 weeks apart1Intake and first inductionHistory, symptom baseline,gut-brain education,clinical induction,first visceral suggestion set$220 CAD2Deepening and visceral workReview week 1 changes,deepened induction,gut-specific imagery,personalised home audio$220 CAD3Consolidation and checkpointProtocol consolidation,between-session audio plan,honest review,decision on continuation$220 CAD$660 CAD total. Continuation beyond session 3 is per-session and optional.
Three sessions, one clean checkpoint. Most responders notice change by session 3; non-responders are not locked in.

Session 1. Intake, history, symptom baseline. We talk through the shape of your IBS picture, what you've already tried, where the medical workup is at, and what specifically you want to be different at the end of three sessions. Then I run the first induction and the opening gut-directed suggestion set with you. The induction itself is straightforward; the work is the structured gut-brain content I deliver inside it. You leave the session knowing what the actual experience is, which removes the "what is this going to be like" question for sessions two and three.

Session 2. A short check-in on what shifted in week one (or didn't), then a deepened induction and a more targeted visceral imagery and suggestion set. This is also the session where I calibrate your personalised home-practice audio to the specific suggestion language that landed for you in sessions one and two. The home audio is yours to keep regardless of whether you continue past session three; it's part of the toolkit.

Session 3. Consolidation of the protocol arc, refinement of your home-practice plan, and an honest checkpoint conversation. By the end of session three the question is concrete: are you noticing meaningful change in symptom intensity, flare frequency, anticipatory anxiety, food tolerance, or baseline trust in your body. If yes, we talk about whether continuation sessions make sense and at what cadence. If no, I'll be honest with you about whether the protocol is unlikely to land in your specific case, and what alternative is worth considering. The Hasan 2019 (PMID 30702396) durability evidence is what makes the short commitment reasonable: when GDH lands, the effects persist long-term rather than requiring indefinite ongoing treatment.

The reason I set the commitment at three sessions specifically, rather than one or twelve, is clinical and practical. One session genuinely isn't enough to know whether the protocol is landing; the first induction is partly you learning the experience. Twelve sessions is the classical Manchester programme length, but locks a non-responder into a long programme. Three sessions is the shortest window that gives us a clean read on whether to extend, while protecting you from sunk-cost pressure if it isn't the right fit.


Frequently asked questions

Do I need a referral from my GP or GI in Quebec to start gut-directed hypnotherapy?+

No. Hypnotherapy in Quebec isn't a regulated health profession, so there's no formal medical referral pathway like there is for a RAMQ-funded specialist. I do strongly recommend that you have a working diagnosis from your family doctor or gastroenterologist before we book. Gut-directed hypnotherapy is an evidence-based intervention for diagnosed disorders of gut-brain interaction (IBS in all subtypes, post-infectious IBS, functional dyspepsia, SIBO with a gut-brain overlay). It isn't a substitute for diagnostic workup. If you have new-onset symptoms, weight loss, blood in stool, or any red-flag features, see a physician first. The fit call is where I sort this out with you before you commit to anything.

Is virtual gut-directed hypnotherapy as effective as in-person for Quebec patients?+

Yes. I run the same protocol either way. Hasan 2019 (PMID 30702396) compared face-to-face gut-directed hypnotherapy against the same protocol delivered remotely and the long-term durability profile was similar. The therapeutic mechanism is verbal and auditory: my voice, the focused-attention state, the structured visceral suggestion language. None of that depends on us sharing a room. My Montreal and Quebec clients connect from their living room or home office, and the clinical work is identical to what I'd do in person in Calgary. Honestly, most of my clients prefer virtual because being in a familiar environment makes it easier to settle into the focused state the protocol needs.

Can my Quebec extended health benefit plan reimburse this?+

Hypnotherapy generally isn't directly covered under Canadian extended health benefit plans, and Quebec follows that pattern. Hypnotherapy isn't a regulated health profession in Quebec, so insurer paramedical lists usually don't include it as an eligible expense. The most common path to any reimbursement I see is a Wellness Spending Account (WSA): an employer-provided allowance many plans now include that covers wellness-related services like stress management or behavioural change. Whether your specific WSA accepts my receipts depends entirely on plan design. You pay at time of service, and I send you a detailed receipt with my ARCH registration number that you can submit for any reimbursement your provider may approve. Check with your provider before we book.

Do you offer sessions in French?+

No. I'm anglophone and I work in English only. Gut-directed hypnotherapy depends on precise language inside the focused-attention state; the visceral suggestion work, the gut-brain imagery, and the inter-session debrief all rely on you and me sharing a strong common language. For French-speaking Montreal and Quebec patients, the right step is to look for a francophone clinical hypnotherapist whose first language matches yours. The protocol itself, the Manchester framework, exists in francophone clinical practice; the practitioner matters. I'm happy to point French-speaking enquirers toward that search rather than enrol them in an English programme that the language barrier would weaken. If you're bilingual and comfortable doing the work in English, the standard protocol is available to you on the same terms as any other Quebec client.

What if 3 sessions is not enough to resolve my symptoms?+

The 3-session commitment is a checkpoint, not a finish line. By the end of session 3, you and I have a clear shared read on whether the protocol is landing for you. If you're showing meaningful change (reduced symptom intensity, fewer flare days, broader food tolerance, less anticipatory anxiety) and you want to extend, I'll keep working with you at the same per-session rate. If you're not responding, I'll tell you honestly and we'll talk about whether a different approach makes more sense. Everitt 2019 (PMID 30765267) showed cognitive behavioural therapy delivered by trained therapists also produces clinically significant IBS improvement; CBT-for-IBS may be a better fit for some presentations. The 3-session structure exists so you don't get stuck with sunk-cost pressure. The point is to figure out within a short window whether GDH is your tool, not to lock you in.

Does RAMQ cover gut-directed hypnotherapy in Quebec?+

No. RAMQ, the Quebec public health insurance plan, doesn't cover hypnotherapy. RAMQ funds physician-delivered care and a defined set of regulated health services; hypnotherapy isn't on that list in Quebec. Note also that RAMQ generally doesn't cover dietitian visits outside of hospital settings, nor psychology services, which means much of the brain-gut and behavioural care for IBS sits outside of public coverage in Quebec. You pay me at time of service. The receipt I send you lists my ARCH registration number and you can submit it for any extended-benefits or Wellness Spending Account reimbursement your private plan allows.

Is RCH-credentialed hypnotherapy the same as a Quebec OPQ-registered psychotherapist?+

No, they're distinct. The Ordre des psychologues du Québec (OPQ) regulates psychotherapy as a reserved act in Quebec, and only OPQ-permitted practitioners may use the title psychotherapist. What I do as an RCH is a different category. I don't represent myself as a psychotherapist or use the regulated psychotherapist title in Quebec. Gut-directed hypnotherapy on the Manchester Protocol is a focused, condition-specific intervention for disorders of gut-brain interaction, and I deliver it as a Registered Clinical Hypnotherapist with ARCH. If you're looking for OPQ-regulated psychotherapy for a broader mental-health picture, that's the appropriate pathway and a different practitioner. If you're looking specifically for gut-directed hypnotherapy as the gastroenterology guidelines describe it, the work I do is the work the guidelines refer to.

I am in Laval, Longueuil, or the West Island; do you serve my area?+

Yes. I work virtually across Quebec, which means there's no functional difference between connecting from downtown Montreal, the Plateau, NDG, Westmount, the West Island, Laval, Longueuil, the South Shore, the North Shore, Gatineau, Quebec City, Sherbrooke, or anywhere else in the province. Session quality doesn't change based on where in Quebec you live. You need a quiet room, a laptop or tablet with a camera, and headphones for about 60 minutes per session.

Related reading: What gut-directed hypnotherapy is · Hypnotherapy for IBS overview · Virtual delivery details · Insurance coverage in Canada · Cost breakdown

About the Author

Danny M.

I'm a Registered Clinical Hypnotherapist (RCH) with the Association of Registered Clinical Hypnotherapists (ARCH). My practice is specifically focused on gut-directed hypnotherapy on the Manchester Protocol framework for IBS, SIBO, functional dyspepsia, and post-infectious IBS. I serve English-speaking Montreal and Quebec patients virtually, alongside Calgary in-person sessions and Canada-wide virtual delivery.

Learn more about our approach

Start gut-directed hypnotherapy from Montreal

  • Free 15-minute video fit consultation in English, no obligation
  • 3-session commitment ($660 CAD), continuation optional
  • Manchester Protocol framework, virtual delivery across Quebec
  • Eastern Time evening slots scheduled around the Montreal workday
  • Detailed receipt with ARCH registration number for any claim you submit
Guarantee: If gut-directed hypnotherapy isn't the right fit for your situation, or if French-language delivery would serve you better, I'll tell you on the consult. No pressure to book.
Apply for a consultation

📅 Currently booking 1 to 2 weeks out for new Quebec clients